Finishing the loft conversion: after talking about doing it since we moved into the house, finally having a spare bedroom permanently set up for guests, and our own loft bedroom with en-suite bathroom is amazing.

Going to Rome for our anniversary: neither of us had been before and it was a busy 3 days of sightseeing, eating and drinking. Such a beautiful city. Of course I wrote on both flights, which I also loved.

Going to the RNA Conference in July: this is one of my writing highlights of each year. It’s a great conference full of useful workshops and lectures. It’s a great opportunity to meet up with old author friends and make new ones. And this year I made a lovely bunch of new friends who have been so lovely to chat to online afterwards.

Organising two budget writing retreats: one was in May which had 4 authors writing furiously, chatting lots, and drinking lots of wine; the second was on October with two caravans and a total of 8 writers which was an absolutely blast. I’m currently reading a book by a friend that was partly written in his caravan, and he thanks us in the dedication at the start!

Seeing panto twice – once in January for BF’s birthday and then in December with BF’s parents. Julian Clarey was a triumph of course. The evil villains were played by Paul O’Grady and Elaine Paige and the entire night was fabulous.

Organising, running and getting great feedback from 3 Real People Write Books workshops with my friend and fellow author, Virginia Heath: we had the first in January, then took over the London RNA Chapter meeting in April, and finished the year with another in September which gathered an average of 10/10 rating from delegates.

Going on holiday abroad with Mum: she wanted to treat us to a holiday so we decided on Portugal as none of us had been before, the village was walkable so Mum could amuse herself if we wanted to loll by the pool and read all day as we’re apt to do on holiday. There were some tense moments because I’d not gone on holiday abroad for a week with Mum since I was a teenager, but overall we got on well, had a right laugh at times, ate lots of food and drank wine and enjoyed the sights of Sesimbra and Lisbon together.

Signing contracts with Nine Star Press for 5 books to be published in 2018: really looking forward to working with this new publisher to me, and getting these stories out in the world to be enjoyed.

Writing a non-fiction marketing book: this started as an idea at the Southern RNA chapter meeting where I did a short talk on marketing. A few authors said it was the first time they’d actually understood marketing and what it included and had I thought about writing it into a book. Well, I did, and I’m not receiving some lovely comments from authors I know about it which I’ll be adding to the cover when I publish it later this year.

Steps: last year I had the luck of going to the Steps musical with my dear friend George and his lovely friends. I also saw Steps live at Wembley with George and his friends too. It was simply joy from start to end. Wonderful.

Cars: going to the Bromley Pageant of motoring with my MX5 and attending the NEC classic car show with my car-friend James (neither of our other halves are much into cars, so we couple up and tend to do them together in solidarity).

Bestseller by Olivia GoldsmithIt’s a big fat 700 page blockbuster of a book about a series of interlinked stories about the book industry. There’s an editor, an aspiring author, a well-established author. All the archetypes are there. And it’s told with such razor sharp wit that I literally couldn’t put it down. Such enormous fun.

Montana Sky by Nora RobertsThree sisters getting to know each other through being forced to live on the farm of their late father, sexy cowboys. Romance and conflict oozing out of every page. Twists and turns in the plot. And a big squishy happy ever after. It was glorious.

Octavia by Jilly CooperShe wrote this before her bigger doorsopper style books, and I adored every single page turning moment. Wonderfully witty characterisation, perfect word choice. Something happens on every page. Zipping dialogue. I almost started to read it again once I’d finished it, but then I had the next book on my faves list to read…

The Dilemma by Penny VincenziI save these 800 plus page glitzy contemporary fantasies for holidays. I’d take about 6 weeks otherwise to read one. A rich man and his wife, she’s made to make a choice of questionable moral standing. Affairs. Wayward children trying to get revenge on their father, with their step-mother. Fabulous fizzing dialogue. Simply delicious. Everything I want in a book of this type.

The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret AtwoodHaving watched the TV series I wanted to go to the original. I don’t normally enjoy literary fiction because it feels rather too ponderous for my liking. This was perfect. Clear imagery. Brilliant characterisation of Offred. Clever ways of delineating between the now under the Gilead, and the then, before the totalitarian regime took over. The ending was a bit of a let down but I know it wasn’t heading for a HEA, so…

Romancing The Wrong Twin by Clare LondonI don’t normally read m/m romance; for a whole host of reasons I won’t go into now, it’s just not for me. However, having been recommended this by the author – who – FULL DISCLOSURE – is a dear friend of mine – I enjoyed it tremendously. The mistaken identity. The comedy. The gradual romance of the two guys. Even the sex scenes (and I’m not one who enjoys a sex scene in a book, because often in some genres it’s simply added for filler rather than plot or character progression) but these were perfect. The portrayal of the two heroes was well-rounded, realistic, and interesting, with clear differences in their dialogue and thoughts. And the secondary characters, with the mistaken identity and the photo shoot scene! Laugh...I nearly fell off my chair!

That Despicable Rogue by Virginia Heath I don’t read historical romances. I used to think they would be ponderous, and rather like that well-known author whose name sounds the same as an old British car make beginning in A (whose books I have tried to read and abandoned twice). Also – FULL DISCLOSURE – the author is another dear friend of mine, but I needed to share how much I loved her book too. Anyway...how wrong could I be about my historical romance pre-conceptions? Even Himself - who not only doesn’t read romance, he also doesn't really read fiction – enjoyed this. The plot zipped along. The friction between the hero and heroine zinged off the page, and the romance developed beautifully. Plenty of wit too. The descriptions gave a great sense of the period setting, but didn’t get in the way of the actual story – which used to be a worry of mine when reading historical novels. Wonderful.

How to Enjoy Writing by AsimovSome great tips about simplifying your life to prioritise writing. A wonderful analogy about two different types of writing either focussing on the story, or the words themselves, and some really inspirational quotes throughout. It was clear, well-structured, and I shall be using some extracts in my marketing for romance authors non-fiction book.

Gentlemen Prefer Brunettes by Liz FieldingThis is the 4th book I’ve read from this prolific Mills and Boon author. I’ve loved them all, but this one, for some reason was simply gorgeous. It’s contemporary. It has a female famous chef pitted against an arrogant male womaniser. Sparks fly. Nieces and nephews are involved. A wonderful French farce-eque scene with the chef cooking on behalf of the man who’s entertaining another woman (he’s not interested in, but we don’t know this yet). I laughed at the wit, and cried at the big squishy HEA. Perfect.

Back in the Headlines by Sharon KendrickThis was the first of this author’s books I’ve read. She is a prolific Mills and Boon author, selling more than 20million books and writing over 100. As soon as I knew it had a girl group member fallen on hard times as the heroine I. Was. There. And she’s combined with an arrogant (but ultimately very kind, and tight-trousers-gorgeous) rich Duke who helps her out in her time of need. Sizzling chemistry. Great sex scenes showing even in a modern romance there’s no need to show every single in and out of the act to write an emotional, satisfying romantic sex scene. Great dialogue, clever descriptions to give you just enough to see things, but not to stop the story. Such enormous rollicking fun!

A Very Special Midwife by Gill Sanderson Since the sad passing of Roger Sanderson (the author of this book) in late 2017, I thought I’d read one of the Mills and Boon medical romances he’s famous for. Two very dedicated hospital professionals meet and fall in love. The obstacles they overcome had me crying. It’s so clever with hanging back about the happy ever after, because I wasn’t sure if it really would all be well in the end. Also, a master class in understated, emotional, plot-forwarding and character-showing sex scenes. Without all the need for the ins and outs. Lovely.

All In The Mind by Alastair CampbellA moving portrait of a man battling with depression, who is a therapist, trying to help his clients do the same. The clients are from a variety of backgrounds, including a MP who’s trying to get help for his alcoholism – that he’s very much in denial is true; includes an extract of a diary he’s asked to keep detailing the amount of alcohol he’s drunk during a day. Such strong emotional conflict between what he believes to be the case and what is actually the case. No happy ever after. In fact a really rather sad ending. However, the writing style is so accessible and simple in its journalistic recounting of the story on every page, without needless filler to bog things down, I didn’t mind.What were your best reads of 2017?